[xep-support] Re: Encoding spaces at line ends and between words

From: Dave Pawson <dave.pawson_at_ADDRESS_REMOVED>
Date: Mon May 09 2016 - 05:51:10 PDT

Or the markup?Is there space between the closing (e.g. italic) markup and the textof the next word?...</italic>Word will show no space, i.e. respecting your wishes?
HTH
On 2 May 2016 at 13:14, Armin Günther <guenther_AT_zpid.de> wrote:> As an addition to my previous post: Perhaps this mostly is not a XEP/PDF> problem but a problem of the respective PDF-viewer?>> - Armin>>>> Hi all,>>>> Is there a way to control how spaces at line ends and between words with>> different styles are encoded into PDF? There seems to be no space encoded at>> line ends and between words with different styles (e.g.>> bold/italics/normal). When we use PDF annotation tools on our PDFs generated>> by XEP (or simply want to copy text from PDFs generated by XEP) words/lines>> are concatenated as in the following example taken from a RenderX demo>> document (http://www.renderx.com/files/demos/examples/CH11.pdf):>>>> Gender, in contrast, is a *social,not* a biological characteristic.>> *Genderconsists* of *what-ever* behaviors and attitudes a group considers>> proper for its males and females. *Conse-quently*, gender varies from one>> society to another. Whereas *sexrefers* to male or *female,genderrefers*
 to>> masculinity or femininity. In short, you inherit your sex, but you>> *learnyour* gender as you are socialized into the behaviors and attitudes>> your culture asserts *areappropriate* for your sex.>> *Text copied from http://www.renderx.com/files/demos/examples/CH11.pdf>> with *missing spaces*>>>> Is there a way to have real spaces encoded and not just positioning of>> text in PDFs here? The result should look like this text:>>>> Gender, in contrast, is a *social, not* a biological characteristic.>> *Gender consists* of *what- ever* behaviors and attitudes a group considers>> proper for its males and females. *Conse- quently*, gender varies from one>> society to another. Whereas *sex refers* to male or *female, gender refers*>> to masculinity or femininity. In short, you inherit your sex, but you *learn>> your* gender as you are socialized into the behaviors and attitudes your>> culture asserts *are appropriate* for your sex.>>>> Thanks!>> Armin>>>>>>> _______________________________________________> (*
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-- Dave PawsonXSLT XSL-FO FAQ.Docbook FAQ.http://www.dpawson.co.uk
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Received on Mon May 9 05:49:03 2016

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